On July 9, the 28-year-old mother was gunned down in the 1400 block of Tremont Street. Eleven days later, when Moore was laid to rest on July 20, shots rang out, leaving three seriously injured during her funeral procession.

"We need to find a way to stop all this killing, because it got out of control," Moore's mother, Stephanie Tinnin, told IndyStar Wednesday. "My daughter didn’t ever deserve to die like she did."

More than 100 concerned community members, police officers and faith leaders gathered near the gates of Sutherland Park Cemetery Wednesday night to pray for peace nearly a week after Moore's funeral.

Together, the group prayed for an end to the violence. They prayed for mothers. They prayed for fathers. They prayed for young men and women. They prayed for their city.

"Don't give up on God," they sang, "because He won't give up on you."

Among the injured in last week's shooting was Richard Grundy III, Moore's cousin and the alleged leader of the "Grundy Crew." Prosecutors last year dropped murder and cocaine dealing charges against him.

Tammy Hatcher, Tinnin's cousin, said the whole family grieves. She declined to further discuss Grundy's involvement in last week's shooting, saying she believes the focus should be less on the family name and more on the loss of a young mother.

"It's rough," Hatcher said. "All we can do is pray. A family that prays together, stays together."

The Rev. Wayne L. Moore, senior pastor at Olivet Missionary Baptist Church, said Wednesday's vigil was the first of many steps to ending violence.

"We’ve been fighting this battle for a long time, but when you come to a graveyard to settle a score, that’s not the place to do it," he said. "Matter of fact, a score ought not to be settled that way. The Book says, 'Let us come and reason together.'"

He said he hopes young people see that there's more to life than death. That no matter who they are or what they're doing right now, they can put down whatever gun they may have and begin making better choices.

"We hope ... to lift the consciousness of young people in our city, to put them to a place to where they can start putting these guns down and start doing something other than shooting and committing homicides on one another," he said.

As of Wednesday, Indianapolis Metropolitan Police had investigated 71 criminal homicides, down slightly from 76 at the same time last year, according to data prepared by IMPD. In 2016, the city broke and set a record for criminal homicides for the second year in a row.

IMPD Chief Bryan Roach said he hopes that's not the case again this year. He wants the people who might be involved in those crimes to hear this cry for unity and to turn their lives around.

"The community’s fed up, and they’re angry and they want it to stop," Roach said. "It’s not about good or evil. It’s about people."

Stephanie Tinnin said she wants the people involved in her daughter's death to know that they're not hurting one person when they commit an act of violence, but countless others.

"It’s just like a snowball effect," Tinnin said. "You do one thing to hurt somebody — it’s gonna hurt everybody else. It needs to stop."

Until then, Jasmine Moore's family will pray for justice, for peace and for an end to violence in Indianapolis.